Located on 420 North Van Buren Street, this 102-story spire held the corporate offices of Wisconsin Telecommunications and the title of tallest building in Wisconsin since completion in 2029. Taking advantage of the latest in green-technology, the building could circulate the airflow naturally reducing the need for massive air conditioning units. Solar panels adorning the southern facing sections of the tower allowed large amounts of energy to be used and stored. Rain-collecting groves on the roof allowed water to be stored and used which reduced the cost of operation. Wiscom Tower also took advantage of powerful security systems including anti-aircraft devices, hover drones that can communicate with law enforcement, and the latest in fire-suppression equipment.
Wiscom used the tower as the test-site to showcase their LTE5 network starting in Spring of 2044.
After the collapse of society, the tower had been evacuated and security systems placed the tower into lockdown. Because the building can generate it's own electricity the security systems stayed on as the hover drones went about their routines of guarding Wiscom's technological assets and scanning for unauthorized people between trips to the self-operating recharging stations. The solar panels still work and the building still has some of it's many LED lights working at night. Including the ones on the top of building marking its spot on what is left of the Milwaukee skyline at night.
Wiscom used the tower as the test-site to showcase their LTE5 network starting in Spring of 2044.
After the collapse of society, the tower had been evacuated and security systems placed the tower into lockdown. Because the building can generate it's own electricity the security systems stayed on as the hover drones went about their routines of guarding Wiscom's technological assets and scanning for unauthorized people between trips to the self-operating recharging stations. The solar panels still work and the building still has some of it's many LED lights working at night. Including the ones on the top of building marking its spot on what is left of the Milwaukee skyline at night.